Climate sceptics and the gambling industry fund MPs offices

MPs Rachel Reeves, David Lammy, Yvette Cooper, Wes Streeting Images: Wikipedia

JVL Introduction

As part of its Dark Money Investigations openDemocracy has published Andrew Kersley, reposted below, on private donors to political parties, in particular to individual MPs to support their private offices.

It neatly complements John Booth’s Why do private donors fund Labour? which we posted recently.

In this case, it is gambling firms and climate sceptics, which apparently handed over more than £1m in just one year recently.

Particularly interesting – and alarming – from our point of view is that almost half of this went to just four Labour frontbenchers: Rachel Reeves, Yvette Cooper, David Lammy and Wes Streeting.

Susan Hawley, executive director of Spotlight on Corruption said “The public needs to be assured that these advisers are acting in their best interests – not the interests of the donor signing their paycheques.”

A wider probe into party financing is long overdue…

This article was originally published by openDemocracy on Mon 23 Jan 2023. Read the original here.

Revealed: MPs’ staff bankrolled by climate sceptics and gambling industry

Exclusive: Campaigner warns of ‘conflict of interest’ over donors who gave £1m to fund MPs’ staff and offices

Labour’s shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, and shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, have both accepted donations from figures linked to the gambling industry

Private donors including gambling firms and climate sceptics are bankrolling MPs’ staff and offices, handing over more than £1m in just one year, openDemocracy can reveal.

Other donors include banks, property firms and evangelical Christians, leading anti-corruption campaigners to warn of “major conflicts of interest” in “giving certain interest groups privileged access to influential MPs”.

The wages of staff employed by MPs are normally paid via the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA), which regulates expenses and business costs. But private companies and wealthy individuals can fund additional staff, helping MPs to expand their teams and build their public profile.

In total, 24 MPs declared receiving private donations for additional staffing and office costs in the year to November 2022, according to the Register of Members’ Financial Interests.

The true value of privately funded political advisers is likely to be far higher because MPs are not required to specify if their donations are used for these purposes – meaning those who did declare did so voluntarily.

Almost half of the £1m spent by private donors on MPs’ staffing and ‘office costs’ went to just four Labour frontbenchers

The figures also do not include money from charities or trade unions, or pro bono legal work offered as donations by law firms.

Almost half of the £1m spent by private donors on MPs’ staffing and ‘office costs’ in the year from November 2021 went to just four Labour frontbenchers: Rachel Reeves, Yvette Cooper, David Lammy and Wes Streeting. Together, they received a total of £475,000.

Reeves alone accepted nearly £248,000, far more than any other MP. Her donors include Neil Goulden, the former chairman of gambling giant Gamesys, who gave £20,000 to “support the shadow chancellor’s office”.

Gambling industry donors are a repeat fixture for Labour. The shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, took £5,000 from Red Capital Ltd, which is owned by former lobbyist and Labour peer Jon Mendelsohn, who is chair of gambling giant 888 Holdings, the company behind William Hill.

In total, Streeting received more than £95,000 of private funding for extra staff. This included money from a mysterious company called MPM Connect. Reports recently claimed that MPM Connect has no staff, no website and is registered at an office where the secretary has never heard of it.

Streeting is one of three Labour MPs who have faced calls to return the “dark money donations” from MPM Connect, along with Dan Jarvis and Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary.

Streeting also took donations from a campaign group called Labour for the Long Term, whose connections to the controversial Effective Altruism movement faced questions last month.

Cooper and shadow foreign secretary David Lammy received £71,000 and £62,000 respectively, but the identity of some of their donors is unclear. Some individuals donated under their own name but with no other identifying information, making it impossible to be sure who they are if they have common names.

Labour has faced increasing strains on its finances. An exodus of nearly 100,000 members in 2021 caused the party’s annual deficit to grow to £4.8m in 2021, forcing it to make almost a quarter of its staff redundant.

‘Privileged access’

Records show that five MPs have staff whose salaries are paid by PR firms that have represented and lobbied for the likes of Amazon and outsourcing giant Serco.

In one case, communications business Weber Shandwick paid for a member of staff to be seconded to work for former shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds, at a cost of £55,800 for just over half a year. Weber Shandwick has lobbied for companies such as British Gas, KPMG and Rupert Murdoch’s News UK, as well as having reportedly worked for the Egyptian government’s state intelligence services, which are infamous for their use of torture to suppress dissent.

Labour MP Bridget Phillipson has taken £15,000 from a former Labour minister, Jim Murphy, whose PR firm Arden Strategies promises to help its corporate clients to “understand” Labour and get the party to “understand” them.

Nine other MPs also had staff costs paid by developers or those connected to the property industry. They include Labour’s Rosena Allin-Khan, who received £26,000 from private donors such as development firm Henley Homes. The company was criticised in 2019 when it reportedly tried to “segregate” the playground at a housing development in south London by blocking poorer children in socially rented accommodation from playing in it.

Allin-Khan’s colleague, Jonathan Reynolds, had a parliamentary assistant on secondment from NatWest at a cost of more than £15,000. NatWest has accrued at least £703m in fines since 2010, for offences ranging from foreign exchange market manipulation to failing to stop money laundering – making it the UK’s third most fined firm, according to the Violation Tracker website.

Meanwhile, several Tory MPs received staff and office funding from wealthy donors who have previously expressed scepticism about the science of climate change.

In one case, backbencher Steve Baker took £5,000 from Neil Record, the chairman of climate science-denying group Net Zero Watch. Record is also chair of the Institute of Economic Affairs, the BP-funded think tank that was behind many of Liz Truss’s doomed economic policies.

Susan Hawley, executive director of campaign group Spotlight on Corruption, told openDemocracy: “MPs need fully impartial advice to properly advance their constituents’ interests and maintain their trust. Channelling donations through the subsidy of advisers’ salaries risks giving certain interest groups privileged access to influential MPs and could result in major conflicts of interest”.

She added: “The public needs to be assured that these advisers are acting in their best interests – not the interests of the donor signing their paycheques.”


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Comments (5)

  • keith russell says:

    Chicken coup scabs still showing their true views of self interest. Socialists democracy plus calmer,s Stalinist tendencies looking after the few and turning backs on the many

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  • Martyn Meacham says:

    Whilst these corrupt MPs are accepting bribes, they cannot do the job what they were elected to do….They cannot serve the people whilst they are being bribed to do the bidding of the few….Those guilty of accepting dirty money, must be sacked and prosecuted for corruption!

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  • Joseph Hannigan says:

    They may be corrupt so and sos,,,but they are OUR so and so, Wish I believed that!

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  • Bernard Grant says:

    They are Parliamentary Gravy Train Riders, they couldn’t stop themselves from taking money from any organisation that was offering. It’s been going on in Parliament probably for ever, right now it is part of being a politician, except for those that have strong principles ie Jeremy Corbyn.

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  • Noel Hamel says:

    Some years ago there were proposals for neutral ways to fund our politics with a small levy on individual electors. It could have resulted in an infinitely superior way to support political candidates that avoided completely, any suspicion of bias, of buying influence, or of subverting the interests of the public at large. I still believe it should be possible to conceive of a viable, minimal cost scheme which would ensure confidence in the belief that those elected to serve us aren’t also serving commercial interests.

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